Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Snow geese are an annual visitor to Richmond, to the delight of some, and the disdain of school janitors.

We've been hearing them squawking overhead for the last few weeks, but last week, we checked out the flock gathering at the school. While sights of the field inundated with birds is common, normally there might only be between a dozen to a hundred birds landing at once. Never have we seen a flock of thousands of birds landing at once. It was quite a treat, standing in the midst of such commotion.

The flock was quite uniform - I saw only a single ring-billed gull and a blue morph as part of the flock.

ring-billed gull - it walked around for a few seconds with its wing spread, though with no apparent sign of injury

blue colour morph

In a world where it seems every species is in decline, it's comforting to see some wilderness finding success in spite of humanity. Snow geese are increasing at the rate of 5% per year (Wikipedia), giving hope that our children's children might be able to enjoy this form of wildlife.

At one point, something spooked them, and we felt the wind of thousands of beating wings frantically ascending at once. There was no point in trying to dodge the bits of mud and mostly-digested grass dropping off their feet as they took to the skies.

And like the snow that falls around our city, it can disappear quickly, leaving only a bit of sludge behind.

Monday, December 11, 2017

I seem to never learn from my mistakes. Replanting plants that seem to be outgrowing their pots has always been risky business. Generally speaking, if I can keep a plant alive for 6 months, it'll last 6 years. That is, until I transplant it. Then, the difference in soil kills the plant.

This happened to my venus flytrap a few years back. It died within a few weeks of getting moved to some new peat moss.

And now it's starting to happen to my Christmas Cactus, which I transplanted for the first time this past summer. It budded, but only five flowers emerged. Leaf/branch segments on one side of the plant began dropping off. I wonder if this is the beginning of the end, or if it's just focusing it's new growth on a different part of the plant for the coming year.

I couldn't bring myself to pose the pitiful little plant for it's annual portrait. But a rare December sunlight illuminated the last flower on the plant, and out of respect for tradition, I needed to capture it's brief beauty.

Friday, August 25, 2017

(two solar postings in one month!)
I first heard about this maybe a year or so ago, but did nothing about it. With young kids, plans are often last minute. Last month, we decided we could finally commit, so we scrambled for a hotel room or campsite. Naturally, they were all booked up, at least online. There were a few vacancies provided by first-time AirBNBers wanting to take full advantage of price gouging. We found places in Portland, so we secured those first, but later on a whim, I decide to phone around at various hotels inside totality. Surprisingly, it took less than five calls to find a hotel that still had rooms at reasonable rates; they were reserved for non-internet customers.

From Oklahoma - there was certainly an eventful excitement in the air

An hour before totality, people would park next to open fields with picnic blankets

We chose to watch from a park, where eclipse festivities brought locals and tourists out in the hundreds.

And the moment we were waiting for - totality! A star appeared just left of the sun, which unfortunately wasn't capturable with the camera settings I used

And here's the exuberance of a crowd immersed in the shadow of the moon.

Getting to totality was fine...getting out was a 7 hour trip, normally only 4 hours.

We had just over a minute of totality from where we were, in Woodburn, Oregon. There are few natural wonders that are as grand as a solar eclipse, and everyone in our group agreed it was entirely worth the drive.

Monday, August 7, 2017

Can't get much bigger than this (aside from the accidental capture of a far-off universe in a night photo):

This is the first time I've photographed the sun as a subject. Only used a UV filter, and dialed back exposure to -2 stops. That little dot is a sunspot, about 11 times the size of the earth. I needed to take multiple photos with the sun in different positions just to confirm that it wasn't a speck on my lens.

The smoke from forest fires has made midday feel like a third world country with lax pollution controls. A week ago, when the smoke began blowing in, it triggered memories of coal smoke from villages in Tanzania and the pervasive smog in Beijing. Fortunately for us, this should scrub out the first rainfall, which some weather reports are calling for in about a week's time.